Henry Erskine, 3rd Lord Cardross

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Henry Erskine

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotlandmap
Death: May 21, 1693 (45)
Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
Place of Burial: Midlothian, Scotland
Immediate Family:

Son of David Erskine, 2nd Lord Cardross and Anne Erskine
Husband of Catherine Stewart, Co-heiress of Kirkhill & Strabrock,
Father of Sir David Erskine, 4th Lord Cardross, 9th Earl of Buchan; Katherine Erskine; William Erskine; Mary Nimmo; Ann Edmonstone and 3 others
Half brother of Alexander Erskine; John Erskine of Cardross; Magdalen Moneypenny; Colonel William Erskine; Anne Erskine and 2 others

Managed by: Matthew Christopher "Concrete" ...
Last Updated:

About Henry Erskine, 3rd Lord Cardross

http://www.clanmacfarlanegenealogy.info/genealogy/TNGWebsite/getper...

Children

+ 1. William Erskine, d. Bef 10 Oct 1739

+ 2. David Erskine, 4th Lord Cardross, 9th Earl of Buchan, c. 3 Jan 1672, Port of Menteith, Perthshire, Scotland , d. 14 Oct 1745, London, England

+ 3. Catherine Anne Erskine, b. Abt 1684, Cardross, Angusshire, Scotland , d. 18 Jul 1752

	4. Mary Erskine,   b. 30 Mar 1690, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland ,   d. 1733, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland 

5. Charles Erskine, d. 25 Feb 1763
+ 6. Thomas Erskine, b. 5 Jun 1691, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland , d. 11 Jun 1755, Hamilton, Cumberland, Pennsylvania, America

	7. Anne Erskine,   b. 9 Dec 1692, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland ,   d. Bef 1716  (Age 23 years)

Notes

   1 - Henry Erskine, third Lord Cardross (1650'961693), was a covenanter.

Erskine was the eldest son of David Erskine, 2nd Lord Cardross, by his first wife, Anne, who was fifth daughter of Sir Thomas Hope, king's advocate. The title was originally conferred on the first Earl of Mar, and, in accordance with the right with which he was invested of conferring it on any of his heirs male, it was granted by him to his second son Henry, along with the barony of Cardross. By his father young Erskine had been educated in the principles of the covenanters, and at an early period distinguished himself by his opposition to the administration of Lauderdale. In this he was strongly supported by his wife, Catherine, youngest of the two daughters and coheiresses of Sir William Stewart of Kirkhill.

   On account of his wife's determination to have a Presbyterian chaplain to perform worship in her own house he was fined 4,000l. of which he paid 1,000l., and after an attempt to obtain a remission for the balance he was, 5 August 1675, committed to the prison of Edinburgh, where he remained for four years. In May of the same year, when, during his absence in Edinburgh, conventicles were being held near Cardross, a party of guards in search of a covenanter named John King entered his house at midnight, broke into his chests, and after acting with great rudeness towards his wife placed a guard on it.
   Complaints To The King
   Their complaints that the conventicles then being held had his encouragement were the chief causes why his fine was not relaxed. On 7 Aug. 1677, while still in prison, he was fined in one half of his rent for permitting his two children to be christened by unlicensed ministers. In 1679 the king's forces in their march westwards went two miles out of their way to quarter on his estates of Kirkhill and Uphall, West Lothian. He obtained his release from prison, 30 July of that year, on giving bond for the amount of his fine, and early next year went to London, where he laid before the king a narrative of the sufferings to which he had been exposed. This proceeding gave great offense to the Scottish privy council, who sent a letter to the king accusing Cardross of misrepresentation, the result being that all redress was denied him. Thereupon he emigrated to North America, where he established a plantation at Charlestown Neck, South Carolina. On 28 October 1685 his estate in Scotland was exposed to sale by public roup, and was bought by the Earl of Mar at seventeen years' purchase. Cardross, having been driven from the settlement in Carolina by the Spaniards, went to Holland, and in 1688 he accompanied the Prince of Orange to England.
   In the following year he raised a regiment of dragoons and served under General Mackay against Dundee. An act was passed restoring him to his estates, and he was also sworn a privy councilor and constituted general of the mint. In July 1689 the Duke of Hamilton, the king's commissioner, at a meeting of the council, fell 'with great violence' on Lord Cardross, asserting that it was by his dragoons that the episcopal minister of Logie had been prevented from entering his church; but Cardross denied all knowledge of anything asserted to have happened.
   Service Of The King[edit]
   Cardross was engaged in the Battle of Killiecrankie, of which he sent an account to Lord Melville in a letter of 30 July. When the Duke of Hamilton proposed a new oath to the council, Cardross objected to it as contrary to the instrument of government, and also 'because the maner of swering by the Bible is nether the Scotish nor the Presbiterian forme, and seems to raise the Bible as more than God'. In the instructions sent by King William on 18 Dec. 1689 to 'model three troops of dragoons,' Cardross was proposed as lieutenant-colonel and captain of the first troop. In 1690 he was appointed one of a commission to examine into the condition of the universities. In October 1691 he went to London along with the Earl of Crawford to support the proceedings of the Scotch council against the episcopalians.
   He died at Edinburgh on 21 May 1693. He had four sons and three daughters. His eldest son, David Erskine, 4th Lord Cardross, succeeded to the earldom of Buchan in 1695.
   [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Erskine,_3rd_Lord_Cardross]

2 - Birth 1650 • Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland

   Arrival 1670-1685 • South Carolina
   Marriage 03 Mar 1671 • Caldross, Midlothia, Scotland to Catherine Stewart Co-Heiress Of Kirkhill & Strabrock (1668'961725)
   Imprisonment 1675 - 1679 • Scotland
   He was imprisoned, after opposing the administration in Scotland of the Duke of Lauderdale.
   Migration 1683 • Stewarts Town near Port Royal, South Carolina, USA
   30 Scottish Presbyterians led by Henry Erskine prepared for the coming of nearly 150 Scots who would arrive the following year. But a few years later most of the settlers were murdered by Spaniards from Florida and the remainder fled to Charleston.
   Arrival 1684 • Charleston, South Carolina
   Return To England 1688 From North Carolina he went to Holland and was reunited with his wife. The opportunity to return home was presented in 1688 when, with the other exiled Scots, he accompanied William III, Prince Of Orange to England.
   Henry returned to Scotland and took the governmental seal of Stuart Town with him. 100 years later, his great grandson presented the seal to Thomas Pinckney, the U.S. Minister to the court of St. James. Today the seal resides in the Museum of Charleston.
   Death 21 May 1693 • Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
   Burial Midlothian, Scotland
   Buchan Title 1695 • Scotland
   The death of William Erskine 8th Earl of Buchan opened the succession to the title and estates of Buchan to Henry's son David.
   [Michelle Erskine's Ancestry.com tree CLAN ERSKINE - MBE Owner: erskinem2]

3 - ERSKINE, HENRY, Lord Cardross, born 1646 son of David Erskine and Anne Hope, married Katherine Stewart 1671, imprisoned Edinburgh Castle 1675-1679, emigrated from Gourock on the

   «i»Carolina Merchant, «/i»170 tons, 16 guns, arrived at Charleston on the Ashley River, South Carolina, 2.10.1684, with 148 Scots, settled in Stuartstown, Port Royal, returned to Scotland before 4.1690, died 21.5.1693.
   (The Original Scots Colonists of Early America. Supplement 1607-1707)

* Reference: FamilySearch Family Tree - SmartCopy: Sep 19 2018, 1:05:07 UTC


https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Erskine-394

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Henry Erskine, 3rd Lord Cardross's Timeline

1648
April 9, 1648
Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotlandmap
1672
January 3, 1672
Port of Menteith, Perthshire, Scotland
1674
1674
Peterhead, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, United Kingdom
1675
December 17, 1675
Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland, United Kingdom
1676
1676
Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland, United Kingdom
1690
March 30, 1690
Cardross, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, United Kingdom
1691
June 5, 1691
Scotland, United Kingdom
1692
December 1, 1692
Cardross, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, United Kingdom
1692
Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland, United Kingdom